Sixty-eight years after its finest hour, Britain’s last World War II Motor Gunboat is at the centre of a new adventure.

“MGB 81 and small craft like her kept the beaches safe from marauding Nazi warships, allowing the Allied armies to get safely ashore,” reads a plea issued by a group of Coastal Forces veterans at Gunwharf Quays Marina.

“Boats like this, and the men who crewed them, helped to free Europe.”

The aim is to stir both emotions and pockets in a bid to collect £70,000
– one for each year since D-Day – and drive the boat back across the
channel to the Normandy beaches.

Originally saved three years ago by the Portsmouth Naval Base Property
Trust, who have restored her weaponry, paintwork and two working
engines, the “grand old veteran” will undergo a complete refit,
particularly to correct its defective central engine, if a waiting team
of skilled local engineers can secure funding.

“To have MGB 81 running again, travelling across the channel and sitting
off the D-Day beaches, would be an incredible achievement,” says
historian Dan Snow, saluting this “visceral connection to our history”.

“It would also be a statement that, even as the veterans grow old and
pass away, the memory of what happened in those terrible years will
never fade.”